The missing study groups: Liminality and communitas in the time of COVID-19

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Annals of Anthropological Practice Pub Date : 2024-03-29 DOI:10.1111/napa.12214
Fredy R. Rodríguez-Mejía, Elizabeth K. Briody, Ethan L. Copple, Edward J. Berger
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Abstract

We examine the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on teaching and learning in an Engineering School of a large US research university. We focus on the adjustment of instructors as they converted their courses to distance teaching and learning formats (e.g., virtual sessions, online forums) and on bachelor student experiences with those changes. While both instructors and students experienced liminality, the pandemic affected these groups differently. Instructors attempted to form communitas with their students by prioritizing their teaching responsibilities, increasing the accessibility of course materials, and being more available to students compared to pre-pandemic times. However, students struggled to adapt to online learning contexts which lacked the sense of togetherness previously offered by in-person classes, study-groups, tutorial sessions, and communal study spaces. Unable to interact with their peers and create communitas, learning online proved to be an ineffective “solution.” Interacting with classmates and working in study groups are among the practices that can help students adjust to course delivery changes, even if it means those cultural practices go virtual. We argue that higher learning institutions, regardless of type (e.g., R1, R2, liberal arts, community colleges), should strengthen their remote teaching approaches. However, those strategies should incorporate: building strong relationships within and across roles, designing inclusive teaching and learning practices that take the contexts in which students learn into account, increasing spaces for peer-to-peer learning, and becoming proficient in the technologies needed to teach virtually.

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失踪的研究小组:COVID-19 时代的界限与共性
我们研究了冠状病毒大流行对美国一所大型研究型大学工程学院教学的影响。我们关注的重点是教师在将其课程转换为远程教学和学习形式(如虚拟课程、在线论坛)时的适应情况,以及本科学生对这些变化的体验。虽然教师和学生都经历了边缘状态,但大流行病对这两个群体的影响有所不同。与大流行前相比,教师试图通过优先考虑自己的教学责任、增加课程材料的可及性、更多地与学生接触等方式与学生建立联系。然而,学生们却很难适应在线学习环境,因为在线学习环境缺乏以往由面对面课堂、学习小组、辅导课和公共学习空间所提供的团结感。在线学习无法与同学互动,也无法创造交流氛围,因此被证明是一种无效的 "解决方案"。与同学互动和在学习小组中学习是可以帮助学生适应课程实施变化的做法之一,即使这意味着这些文化习俗将被虚拟化。我们认为,不论是哪种类型的高等教育机构(如 R1、R2、文科、社区学院),都应加强远程教学方法。不过,这些策略应包括:在角色内部和角色之间建立牢固的关系,设计考虑到学生学习环境的包容性教学实践,增加同伴学习的空间,以及熟练掌握虚拟教学所需的技术。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
21
期刊最新文献
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